Is Ben Stokes the highest run-getter among Ashes players who were born outside England or Australia?
And what's the record for most fifty partnerships in a Test innings?

Among players born outside Australia or England, Colin Cowdrey, with 2433, holds the record for most runs in Ashes Tests • Getty Images
England went down to defeat in Sydney last week despite Joe Root scoring 160 in the first innings, and Jacob Bethell a superb 154 in the second. This was only the eighth time a team had lost a Test in which two of their batters reached 150. England also did it last July at Edgbaston, when 158 from Harry Brook and an undefeated 184 from Jamie Smith couldn't prevent India winning by 336 runs, and in Wellington in February 2023, when New Zealand squeaked home by one run despite Root making 153 not out and Brook 186.
Australia's first innings of 567 in the final Ashes Test in Sydney did indeed contain seven partnerships of 50 or more, the highest being 107 for the eighth wicket between Steven Smith and Beau Webster (Travis Head and Marnus Labuschagne put on 105). This turns out to be one short of the Test record: there were eight 50-plus partnerships in India's 664 at The Oval in 2007, when Anil Kumble scored his only Test century. There have been 33 instances of six 50-plus stands in a Test innings.
The only one of Travis Head's dozen Test centuries that was not in Australia was his match-winning 163 in the World Test Championship final against India at The Oval (technically a neutral ground) in 2023.
The leading run-scorer in England-Australia Tests who was not born in either country is Colin Cowdrey - who was born in India - with 2433. Next come Kevin Pietersen (South Africa) with 2158, Ben Stokes (New Zealand) 1746, and Nasser Hussain (India) 1581, not far ahead of the leading Australian, Usman Khawaja (Pakistan) with 1554.
Surrey's William George Jacks is only the third WG to play for England, following the rather more famous WG Grace, who won 22 caps in the 19th century, and the Warwickshire batter Willie Quaife (another William George). Quaife played seven Tests for England during a long county career - he scored 115 in his final first-class innings for Warwickshire, against Derbyshire at Edgbaston in 1928, when he was 56. Quaife is probably best remembered for another match against Derbyshire, at Derby in June 1922, when he and his son Bernard shared a partnership of 49 during which they faced the bowling of Bill Bestwick and his son Robert.
"You can add the West Indian wicketkeeper Deryck Murray to your list of cricketing diplomats," writes David Harris. "He worked in Trinidad and Tobago's Foreign Service for several years. He was his country's Permanent Representative (ambassador) to the United Nations, and was High Commissioner to Jamaica from 2019 to 2023." In addition, "Haseeb Ahsan was the honorary Counsel General of Ireland in Pakistan," writes Tux from the UAE.
Steven Lynch is the editor of the updated edition of Wisden on the Ashes